Egypt death toll rises after soccer riot verdict

The weekend clashes have left up to 32 people dead in a further challenge to Egypt's political stability.

Port Said: Twenty-two people have been confirmed killed in Port Said after 21 Egyptian football fans and club members were sentenced to death over a deadly post-match riot last year in the canal city.

The clashes erupted on Saturday after a Cairo court handed down the death sentences over the football riot last February in which 74 people were killed, and came a day after violence swept Egypt on the second anniversary of its uprising.

As news of the verdict emerged, relatives of those condemned tried to storm the prison in Port Said where they are being held, leading to fierce clashes with security forces.

Two police stations in Port Said were stormed, an AFP correspondent said, and heavy gunfire could be heard in the Al-Manakh neighbourhood.

Ambulances ferried the injured to hospitals all shops and businesses closed for the day as protesters set tyres alight and mosques urged worshippers to donate blood.

Troops are being sent to Port Said, a senior army officer said.

"It has been decided to deploy some units to work for calm and stability and the protection of public establishments," General Ahmed Wasfi said in a statement carried by the official MENA news agency.

The clashes have left 22 people dead and 200 injured, a health ministry statement said. However, reports from Reuters put the figure at 32 people killed in the unrest on Saturday.

Two policemen were among those killed, the interior ministry said in a separate statement, adding that there were "many critical injuries among police forces."

Egypt's opposition threatened to boycott upcoming parliamentary polls if President Mohammed Mursi - facing his worst crisis since coming to power in June - does not find a "comprehensive solution" to the unrest gripping the country.

The National Salvation Front, the main coalition of parties and movements opposing the ruling Islamists, called for among other things the creation of a "national salvation" government, otherwise it will "not participate in the next parliamentary elections."

Last February's riots between fans of Port Said home side Al-Masry and Cairo's Al-Ahly also sparked days of violent protests in Cairo, in which another 16 people were killed.

In the capital, both inside and outside the court, there were explosions of joy at the verdict on Saturday. Women ululated, relatives hugged and shouted "Allahu Akbar" (God is greatest).